학술논문

Smart clocks have a hand in the smart grid
Document Type
Conference
Source
2011 IEEE Power and Energy Society General Meeting Power and Energy Society General Meeting, 2011 IEEE. :1-6 Jul, 2011
Subject
Geoscience
Nuclear Engineering
Power, Energy and Industry Applications
Components, Circuits, Devices and Systems
Computing and Processing
Synchronization
Phasor measurement units
Clocks
Performance evaluation
Delay
Accuracy
Power grids
time synchronization
networked control
model order deduction
data quality
PTP
NTP
GPS
Smart Grid
Language
ISSN
1932-5517
1944-9925
Abstract
Clock synchronization is becoming an increasingly important characteristic of modern wide area monitoring and control systems such as the power grid. It provides an opportunity to coordinate control actions and measurement instants across hundreds of miles and numerous network topologies. Devices and networks have advanced to a point where synchronization across a wide area can be achieved within 1 μs of UTC (Coordinated Universal Time). Along with these advances in clock synchronization must come a shift in the way analysis is performed. Modeling techniques must incorporate the effects of a clock synchronized device, and control techniques can leverage the knowledge of ”time” to achieve unique results. This paper discusses various ways in which clock synchronization affects analysis and performance of the power grid, and presents a few projects related to the technology. Preliminary work has demonstrated the ability of various commercially available devices to provide reliable 1 μs synchronization of clocks, and large variation across devices in terms of clock performance under transient events.